Change Makers
Komal Ahmad
Inspired to Act
by Linda Sechrist

Ours is not the task of fixing the entire world all at once, but of stretching out to mend the part of the world that is within our reach. Any small, calm thing that one soul can do to help another soul will help immensely. It is not given to us to know which acts, or by whom, will cause the critical mass to tip toward an enduring good,” says Clarissa Pinkola Estés, Ph.D., a world-renowned author and Jungian psychoanalyst specializing in post-trauma counsel.
Thousands of people each day choose to see a world radiating with hope and light, despite ever-present conflict and strife. Their talents and gifts, alliances and collaborations are inspiring a new story that ripples outward into our communities and beyond.
In The Ten Gifts: Find the Personal Peace You’ve Always Wanted Through the Ten Gifts You’ve Always Had, author Robin L. Silverman affirms that everyone can reach within, even in the worst of circumstances, for treasures that can be used to improve the lives of others. She concludes, “We are not meant to use our gifts simply to survive, but to satisfy our souls and inspire others to do the same.”
Meeting Basic Needs

Today, Ahmad is the founder and CEO of Copia, an app that matches nonprofits serving in-need veterans, children, women and others with companies that have leftover gourmet food. Following the 2016 Super Bowl, she used Copia’s technology to organize food pickups throughout the San Francisco Bay area. What she calls the “right thing to do” fed more than 41,000 people that day.

Friends Margot McNeeley and Janet Boscarino, in Memphis, Tennessee, looked around for local problems they could fix and took action starting in 2008. A former retail entrepreneur, McNeeley didn’t want food to go to waste and created the Project Green Fork certification program after learning that 95 percent of restaurant waste can be diverted from landfills. Her nonprofit helps restaurants to conserve water and energy, develop recycling and composting systems and switch to biodegradable containers and environmentally friendly cleaning operations.

Throughout two decades of educational activism, John G. Heim’s passion for clean water as a human right has not waned. The founder and leader of The SWFL Clean Water Movement, headquartered in Fort Myers Beach, Florida, persisted even when many business owners considered him a nuisance, driving off tourists.


“For the next six years, our goal is to annually train 50 people that will train 50 more people. Continuing this exponential growth pattern means the potential for 312 million more people living more compatibly and lightly upon the Earth. We’ve already established collaborations with six other cities around the U.S. that can potentially duplicate our efforts,” says Bunn.
Providing Healthcare Options

The author of The Probiotic Cure also helped found the Texas Health Freedom Coalition to protect citizens’ rights to choose alternative medical treatment in her state. Whittiken says, “My work is a labor of love. I have no interest in becoming famous or well known unless it contributes to getting the job done.”

The nonprofit helps rural Haitians build composting toilets and develop organic gardens using recycled waste as fertilizer. It also provides community hygiene education and reforestation. Everything is aimed at breaking Haiti’s widespread cycle of contamination and disease, and safely convert human waste into agricultural fertilizer that’s increasing crop productivity and the availability of healthy food.


Enriching Lives
As an Emmy Award-winning trumpeter, composer, educator and co-founder, conductor and artistic director of the Chicago Jazz Philharmonic (CJP), Orbert Davis is dedicated to multigenre projects. His collaborative research in 2012 while in Cuba on a people-to-people exchange accompanied by fellow musicians and River North Dance Chicago’s Artistic Director Frank Chaves (now retired) proved to be a multifaceted boon.
All of these individuals represent a small percentage of the game-changers actively moving to create an alternative future. Estés observes, “What is needed for dramatic change is an accumulation of acts; adding, adding to, adding more, continuing. We know that it does not take everyone on Earth to bring justice and peace, but only a small, determined group that will not give up during the first, second or hundredth gale.” Linda Sechrist is a senior staff writer for Natural Awakenings. Connect at ItsAllAboutWe.com.
Changing the Game on Public Spaces
In a city bursting at the seams with orange cones, cranes and other signs of development, public spaces are increasingly more and more valuable. These two projects, funded by the Knight Foundation and spearheaded by local change makers, are aiming to transform the way people see the spaces we pass by every day, often without a second glance.No Barriers Project: Over the past year, residents who live along the Statesville Avenue corridor at Park at Oaklawn, Genesis Park and Brightwalk have come together to reimagine Anita Stroud Park. In addition to hosting concerts and other events there, folks have also made their mark on the space with colorful birdhouses and murals. “If we think of spaces that divide people differently, as bridges to bring people together instead of barriers, and if we let the neighborhoods steer by creating these special places, the potential for building stronger communities is incredible,” says Sarah Hazel, who works for the City of Charlotte and is a member of the No Barriers Project team. “The act of co-creating public spaces brings people together, and shapes our perceptions of these spaces, and our understanding of each other.” NoBarriersCLT.com
Open Streets 704: For the second time this year, people will take back the streets of Charlotte. From 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. on October 23, the roads connecting Biddleville, Smallwood, Seversville, Wesley Heights, Fourth Ward, Wilmore and South End will be open for people to walk, bike and just experience the city on a more intimate level. According to OpenStreets704.com, the event is intended to be “more about changing our perspective on how a community can interact with each other in a healthy, car-free, environment rather than creating another street festival.” Expect a plethora of activities, including arts and crafts, a showcase from members of the Charlotte Symphony, yoga triathlon, basketball tournament and much more. OpenStreets704.com
